The purpose of this study is to check if lidocaine intravenous administration during surgery and 24 hours after surgery, associated with standardised management of the patient, helps to accelerate recovery and to improve the quality of recovery, after surgery for colic or rectal neoplasms.

Biological inflammation the day before the surgery, then at 1st, 3rd, and 6th day [ Designated as safety issue: Yes ]

Lidocaine concentration at the end of surgery and 24 hours forward [ Designated as safety issue: Yes ]

Clinical side effects twice a day [ Designated as safety issue: Yes ]

Enrollment:

110

Study Start Date:

May 2005

Study Completion Date:

May 2007

Primary Completion Date:

May 2007 (Final data collection date for primary outcome measure)

Detailed Description:

One of the purposes of postoperative care is to shorten the duration of recovery, in order to reduce the complications and to improve the quality of life. After abdominal surgery, two factors can be modified: early mobilisation, thanks to optimal pain control, and return to a normal feeding, permitted by transit recovery. Opioids, which are usually used for pain control, delay the intestinal transit and can be responsible for side effects like drowsiness, nausea, urine retention.

Lidocaine is a local anaesthetic, which means that it can stop the pain if it is administrated around the nerves. It can also be used intravenously. In this way, it is supposed to decrease opioid consumption, accelerate intestinal transit and even decrease inflammation. Side effects of lidocaine appear at higher plasma concentrations than those considered in the study.

After randomisation, the patient will receive either intravenous lidocaine during the surgery and 24 hours after the surgery, or physiological serum (like placebo). Every patient will dispose of patient-controlled-analgesia with morphine and of a standardised care management. Data will be collected concerning pain level, morphine consumption, psychomotor performances, duration of ileus, speed of activity recovery, quality of recovery, and side effects. Biological evaluation of lidocaine concentration and inflammation will also be done.

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Please refer to this study by its ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00236249